Campfire | |
---|---|
Hebrew | מדורת השבט |
Directed by | Joseph Cedar |
Written by | Joseph Cedar |
Produced by | David Mandil Eyal Shiray |
Starring | Michaela Eshet Hani Furstenberg Moshe Ivgy Maya Maron |
Cinematography | Ofer Inov |
Edited by | Einat Glaser-Zarhin |
Music by | Ofer Shalhin |
Distributed by | Film Movement |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | Israel |
Languages | Hebrew English |
Box office | $34,835 (U.S. domestic)[1] |
Campfire (Hebrew: מדורת השבט, romanized: Medurat Ha-Shevet, lit. 'Tribal Campfire') is a 2004 Israeli film written and directed by Joseph Cedar. Set in 1981, the film focuses on a woman seeking to join an Israeli settlement on the West Bank, despite the protests of her teenage daughters.[2]
The film premiered at the 54th Berlin International Film Festival in February 2004.[3] The film won five Israeli Academy Awards and was Israel's official submission for the 77th Academy Awards in the Best Foreign Language Film category (but did not get a nomination). The film was well received in Israel, the United States, and in international film festivals.[4]
Synopsis
The story of a young widow, mother of two beautiful teenage daughters, who wants to join the founding group of a new settlement of religious Jews in the West Bank, but first must convince the acceptance committee that she is worthy. Things get complicated when the younger daughter is sexually abused by boys from her youth movement.
Cast
- Michaela Eshet as Rachel Gerlik
- Hani Furstenberg as Tami Gerlik
- Maya Maron as Esti Gerlik
- Moshe Ivgy as Yossi
- Assi Dayan as Motkeh
- Oshri Cohen as Rafi
- Yehoram Gaon as Moshe Weinstock
- Yehuda Levi יהודה לוי as Yoel
- Avi Grainik as Oded
- Idit Teperson as Shula (as Edith Teperson)
- Itay Turgeman as Gozlan
- Barak Lizork as Yaniv
- Danny Zahavi as Ilan
- Dina Senderson as Inbal
- Ofer Seker as Yair
References
- ↑ "Campfire (2005)." Box Office Mojo. 1 June 2016.
- ↑ Stephen Holden (September 9, 2005). "A Time of Tangled Transition in Israel, and in a Family". The New York Times. Retrieved September 24, 2017.
- ↑ Edwards, Russell (February 17, 2004). "Campire". Variety. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
- ↑ Tugend, Tom. "Religious Tensions Spark ‘Campfire.’" Jewish Journal. 4 November 2004. 31 May 2016.
External links